瑞典卡羅林斯卡醫學院研究人員8日報告說,他們研究發現一類名為室管膜細胞(ependymal cell)的幹細胞不僅可幫助生成更多新的脊髓細胞,還能幫助恢復脊髓功能。這一成果將有助於研究人員尋找治療人類各種脊髓損傷的新療法。
研究人員在新一期美國《細胞-幹細胞》雜誌上介紹說,他們對實驗鼠的研究發現,一旦老鼠的骨髓組織受損,存在於骨髓中的室管膜細胞就會被啟動,和一些其他類型的細胞一起,促使分化形成更多的新的骨髓細胞,成為生成新骨髓細胞的“主要來源”。
而在未受損傷的老鼠脊髓組織中,室管膜細胞通常是不活躍的,新的骨髓細胞的形成主要由那些與幹細胞相比處於更加成熟階段的細胞分裂而成。
不過,研究人員介紹說,脊髓嚴重受損後,其功能恢復的關鍵可能在於限制尾隨損傷之後的疤痕組織形成,而不僅僅是加強脊髓細胞的再生能力。
但室管膜細胞的身份這時卻顯得有些“尷尬”,雖然它促進分化形成更多新的脊髓細胞,但與此同時,它也會分化形成疤痕組織細胞,另外還分化形成一類對於脊髓功能十分重要的支持細胞。
因此研究人員猜測,也許能夠篩選出一種藥物,在脊髓受損後,能夠有選擇地刺激室管膜細胞,使它分化形成更多的支持細胞,少分化疤痕組織細胞,從而更好地幫助受損脊髓恢復功能。
Stem Cells Repair Damaged Spinal Cord Tissue
ScienceDaily (Oct. 9, 2010) — Researchers at Karolinska Institutet have shown how stem cells, together with other cells, repair damaged tissue in the mouse spinal cord. The results are of potential significance to the development of therapies for spinal cord injury.
There is hope that damage to the spinal cord and brain will one day be treatable using stem cells (i.e. immature cells that can develop into different cell types). Stem cell-like cells have been found in most parts of the adult human nervous system, although it is still unclear how much they contribute to the formation of new, functioning cells in adult individuals.
A joint study by Professor Jonas Frisén's research group at Karolinska Institutet and their colleagues from France and Japan, and published in Cell Stem Cell, shows how stem cells and several other cell types contribute to the formation of new spinal cord cells in mice and how this changes dramatically after trauma.
The research group has identified a type of stem cell, called an ependymal cell, in the spinal cord. They show that these cells are inactive in the healthy spinal cord, and that the cell formation that takes place does so mainly through the division of more mature cells. When the spinal cord is injured, however, these stem cells are activated to become the dominant source of new cells.
The stem cells then give rise to cells that form scar tissue and to a type of support cell that is an important component of spinal cord functionality. The scientists also show that a certain family of mature cells known as astrocytes produce large numbers of scar-forming cells after injury.
"The stem cells have a certain positive effect following injury, but not enough for spinal cord functionality to be restored," says Jonas Frisén. "One interesting question now is whether pharmaceutical compounds can be identified to stimulate the cells to form more support cells in order to improve functional recovery after a spinal trauma."